On 3/16/06, jan gestre <m0n0wall dot list at gmail dot com> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 3/16/06, jan gestre <m0n0wall dot list at gmail dot com> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > On 3/16/06, Chris Buechler < cbuechler at gmail dot com> wrote:
> >
> > > On 3/15/06, jan gestre <m0n0wall dot list at gmail dot com> wrote:
> > > based on the diagram, there is no ip address assigned to the OPT
> > > interface,
> >
> > There is no IP on a bridged interface.
> >
> >
> > > what if i have assigned a private ip address to that interface
> > > e.g. 192.168.2.1 , will the bridge setup still work?
> >
> > If you want private IP's off that interface, you don't want bridging.
> >
> >
> > > is it possible to
> > > assign a private address 192.168.2.2 e.g. to my mail server but in
> > reality
> > > it just forwarding it to that ip because the mail server has a real
> > public
> > > ip e.g. 202.xxx.xxx.xxx, is there a documentation for these kind of
> > setup?
> > >
> >
> > Add that public IP in proxy ARP, then set up 1:1 NAT between the
> > private and public IP's.
> >
> > dear chris,
> > i've added the mailserver's public ip in proxy ARP, then tried to setup
> > 1:1 NAT but i still got the same error which is:
> >
> >
> > The following input errors were detected:
> >
> > - The WAN IP address may not be used in a 1:1 rule.
> >
> > did i miss something?
> >
> > in the proxy ARP gui, what interface do i add it to? the WAN? or OPT1?
> >
>
> i've finally been able to add an ARP proxy for the mailserver and added a
1:1 NAT, i was using /29 before that is why i always get an error, instead i
followed the /32 in the sample config, and it finally saved, but i still
can't browse the squirrelmail gui of my mailserver.
pls help.
TIA